This paper describes a series of experiments to automatically detect and categorise archaeological events—such as survey, excavation, finds and so forth—that are described in natural language text documents. Complex event structures with attributes including date, agent and location are extracted and converted into families of binary relations. These in turn can be mapped to RDF triples for publication as Semantic Web graphs, with the potential of making it dramatically easier to interconnect separate data silos. We present results indicating that although events do not conform to the standard definitions of “entities”, they can be detected with high precision, making large-scale processing of text documents a practical possibility
Event processing is an active area of research in the Natural Language Processing community but reso...
One common application of text mining is event extraction, which encompasses deducing specific knowl...
Due to the numerous information needs, retrieval of events from a given natural language text is ine...
This paper describes a series of experiments to automatically de-tect and categorise archaeological ...
In recent years, event processing has become an active area of research in the Natural Language Proc...
To address archaeology’s most pressing substantive challenges, researchers must discover, access, an...
Extracting data from archaeological texts (from grey literature to journal papers) represents one of...
Extraction and representation of events plays an important role in solving many natural Language pro...
AbstractThis paper addresses the problem of automatic acquisition of semantic relations between even...
International audienceIn this paper, we present a framework and a system that extracts "salient" eve...
International audienceIn this paper, we present a framework and a system that extracts "salient" eve...
Many attempts have been made to extract structured data from Web resources, exposing them as RDF tri...
In this article, I present the questions that I seek to answer in my PhD research. I posit to analyz...
Extracting the reported events from text is one of the key research themes in natural language proce...
Event is a common but non-negligible knowledge type. How to identify events from texts, extract thei...
Event processing is an active area of research in the Natural Language Processing community but reso...
One common application of text mining is event extraction, which encompasses deducing specific knowl...
Due to the numerous information needs, retrieval of events from a given natural language text is ine...
This paper describes a series of experiments to automatically de-tect and categorise archaeological ...
In recent years, event processing has become an active area of research in the Natural Language Proc...
To address archaeology’s most pressing substantive challenges, researchers must discover, access, an...
Extracting data from archaeological texts (from grey literature to journal papers) represents one of...
Extraction and representation of events plays an important role in solving many natural Language pro...
AbstractThis paper addresses the problem of automatic acquisition of semantic relations between even...
International audienceIn this paper, we present a framework and a system that extracts "salient" eve...
International audienceIn this paper, we present a framework and a system that extracts "salient" eve...
Many attempts have been made to extract structured data from Web resources, exposing them as RDF tri...
In this article, I present the questions that I seek to answer in my PhD research. I posit to analyz...
Extracting the reported events from text is one of the key research themes in natural language proce...
Event is a common but non-negligible knowledge type. How to identify events from texts, extract thei...
Event processing is an active area of research in the Natural Language Processing community but reso...
One common application of text mining is event extraction, which encompasses deducing specific knowl...
Due to the numerous information needs, retrieval of events from a given natural language text is ine...